Not all salad dressing comes in glass bottles. Some are plastic. It depends on the preference of the company making it.
One quart of salad dressing is 32 fluid ounces. Standard bottles of salad dressing are 16 fluid ounces. You can expect to pay around $3.50 for a 16 ounce bottle of salad dressing in Washington State, so a quart will cost about $7.
yes VOSS water bottles are glass. but i think they might have some that come in plastic. but all the VOSS that i have seen have come in glass. you could go to their website vosswater.com
If you mean dressing for salad, this is tough. In Mexico, people just put oil on salad. They say aceite de ensalada for the stuff they put on salad, but that just means salad oil. If the oil has vinegar in it, they'll call it vinagreta (vinagrette for us in the US). When they come to the US and they encounter French, Russian, Ranch, Thousand Island, Creamy Italian and all that other stuff, they freak out and don't know what to call it so they just say dressing, as in Quieres dressing en tu ensalada? (Do you want dressing on your salad) or Quieres que te ponga de esto en tu ensalada? (Do you want me to put some of this on your salad?)
It was named for the region where it was first prepared: Thousand Islands, New York.
Yes, I have seen many types of pills that have come in bottles.
It's usually debris from a glass object that ended up in the ocean, broke into pieces, and was smoothed by the action of waves and sand. It can come from pretty much anything - old soda bottles, lamps, windows, whatever. Back in the days when Coke bottles were made from thick, foam-green colored glass, there were loads of pieces that would wash up on shore at the end of the summer. They could be quite interesting, with different shapes and degrees of polishing.
Bottles come in many sizes.
i find them in an old candy shop dowtown from where i live(: they are amazing and they come in this little old fashion tub.. i go there almost every weekend(:
it came from japan
Glass bottles, since they are entirely chemically neutral, are better if you are worried about either chemical reactions or about chemicals from plastic leaching into your food or drink. If it is the environment's health you are concerned about, both are equally recyclable, though glass is superior in this aspect as well, since plastic is largely made from petroleum products. However, if you are concerned about safety and portability, plastic is better, especially when giving bottles to small children to hold, as glass is breakable. Glass is also prone to shattering under rapid temperature changes, such as pouring hot tea over a glass full of ice cubes to make iced tea. (Tempered glass such as Pyrex, of which glass cooking ware is made, does not have this problem, however.) The question of safety in using plastic bottles , especially infant formula bottles, has come about because of worldwide attention to substances like bisphenol-A being used in the manufacture of these as part of their plastic, and also as mold releasers so these bottles don't stick in the metal molds. Canada and some European countries have already banned this substance in the production of these products. Current recommendations are to at least avoid plastic bottles with the number "7" stamped on the bottom. Stainless steel bottles and most products from Nalgene seem to be safer alternatives, as would be glass with plastic safety sleeves around them.
Gentleman Jack typically comes in 750ml bottles.
Milk did not come in cartons in 1915! Milk came in pint or quart size glass bottles in English speaking countries and in liter size bottles in other countries. You bought the bottle and the milk. You could exchange the bottle when you bought a new bottle of milk or purchase a new bottle. Most people exchanged bottles.